What level of central enterprises is China Bank?

Deputy ministerial level. The administrative level of China Bank is the deputy ministerial level. The administrative level of central enterprises. In the list of 1 15 central enterprises listed on the website of SASAC, the top leaders of the top 54 enterprises (referring to the chairman, party secretary and general manager) are mostly "deputy ministerial level".

Bank of China is a well-known state-owned commercial bank in China, a large central enterprise directly under the central government and a national vice-ministerial unit. Judging from the equity distribution of Bank of China, Central Huijin Company is the largest shareholder and controlling shareholder of Bank of China, with a shareholding ratio of 64.02%. Central Huijin Company is a wholly state-owned company funded by the state, which exercises rights and performs obligations on behalf of the state to the investors of state-owned commercial banks. Therefore, China Bank should be a state-owned listed company. Bank of China is a state-owned enterprise. The largest shareholder of Bank of China is Central Huijin Company, which is a wholly state-owned company funded by the state, so Bank of China is a state-owned enterprise.

There are also obvious differences in the management levels of central enterprises, which are divided into ministerial level, deputy ministerial level, main hall and deputy hall, main hall and deputy hall. Moreover, this level is different. Sinopec, PetroChina and China Telecom. Once subordinate to the ministerial level, it was later demoted or split and no longer belongs to the ministerial level. China Tobacco Corporation, China Bank, China Agricultural Development Bank, etc.

Central enterprises, that is, central enterprises, refer to wholly state-owned or state-controlled enterprises directly managed by the central government or entrusted by the Central People's Government (the State Council) or state-owned assets supervision and administration institutions to exercise the responsibilities of investors, and their leading bodies are entrusted by the Central Organization Department, SASAC and other central ministries and commissions.

Central enterprises are all state-owned enterprises, but state-owned enterprises are not necessarily central enterprises. Central enterprises are the abbreviation of "centrally managed enterprises", occupying a dominant position in major industries and key areas related to national security and the lifeline of the national economy, and are an important pillar of the national economy. According to the authority of state-owned assets management, state-owned enterprises are divided into central enterprises (state-owned enterprises supervised and managed by the central government) and local enterprises (state-owned enterprises supervised and managed by local governments).